After a nearly two-decade silence, chamber-pop duo Cardinal emerge from their near-mythic hibernation with the sleepy-eyed, Beatles-underwater gem "Northern Soul," which crawls out of the speakers as if to say, "Yeah, we've been gone since 1994 — but really, don't mind us!" Though multi-instrumentalists Richard Davies and Eric Matthews have kept busy since Cardinal's homonymous, mid-'90s landmark release (Davies solo, Matthews recording under his own name and arranging for other artists), their lone Cardinal classic has stewed in its own legendary juices ever since. With the densely layered Hymns, they've crafted a triumphant sequel — though they set the bar impossibly high with "Northern Soul," the kind of effervescent pop miracle that earns its shrugged-off chorus "Hallelujah!" Outfitted with harpsichord, swirling vocal harmonies, and McCartney-esque bass runs, it is headphone-absorbing perfection. Meanwhile, "Carbolic Smoke Ball" pits smoky, muted trumpets over raunchy distortion — ridiculously catchy and fascinatingly weird. After that opening one-two punch, Hymns is less essential. The chiming guitar-pop throwback "Love like Rain" may be polished, but it feels like a sketch. Even in these minor moments, though, the beauty is staggering — every nook and cranny overflowing with otherworldly melody. "It's time for wine and nursery rhymes/Burn incense and common sense," they sing on closer "Radio Birdman." Put that on a T-shirt.

ATLAS GENIUS | WHEN IT WAS NOW | February 20, 2013 Atlas Genius are schooled students of modern pop architecture, seamlessly bouncing from Coldplay-styled acoustic rock to fizzy Phoenix funkiness to deadpanned Strokes-ian guitar chug. But When It Was Now is more like an alt-pop NOW compilation than a joyous synthesis.

FOALS | HOLY FIRE | February 11, 2013 Even at their most expansive, Foals are digging into more primal territory.